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Query: EC:6.3.5.5 (
CPS
)
1,262
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase catalyzes the hydrolysis of glutamine by the nucleophilic attack of an active site cysteine residue through a mechanism that requires the formation of a gamma-glutamyl thioester intermediate. The steady-state mole fraction of the thioester intermediate was determined to be 0.23 in the presence and absence of
ATP
and bicarbonate. The kinetics of formation and hydrolysis of the gamma-glutamyl thioester intermediate during
CPS
catalyzed hydrolysis of glutamine were determined. When
ATP
and bicarbonate are added to
CPS
and glutamine, the kcat for glutamine hydrolysis increases from 0.17 to 150 min-1. The observed rate constant for thioester intermediate formation increases from 18 to 580 min-1, and the microscopic rate constant for hydrolysis of the intermediate increases from 0.15 to 460 min-1. These results demonstrate the kinetic competence of the thioester intermediate during glutamine hydrolysis. The rate-determining step changes from the hydrolysis of the intermediate when
ATP
and bicarbonate are absent to the formation of the intermediate upon the addition of
ATP
and bicarbonate. The 3 order of magnitude increase in the rate of glutamine hydrolysis upon the addition of
ATP
and bicarbonate is indicative of the allosteric communication between two of the three reaction centers of
CPS
. These sites are physically separated by approximately 45 A.
...
PMID:Regulatory control of the amidotransferase domain of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. 984 48
The synthesis of carbamoyl phosphate by the mammalian multifunctional protein, CAD, involves the concerted action of the 40 kDa amidotransferase domain (GLN), that hydrolyzes glutamine and the 120 kDa synthetase (
CPS
) domain that uses the ammonia, thus produced,
ATP
and bicarbonate to make carbamoyl phosphate. The separately cloned GLN domain has very low activity due to a reduction in kcat and an increase in Km but forms a hybrid complex with the isolated Escherichia coli
CPS
subunit. The hybrid has full glutamine-dependent catalytic activity and a functional interdomain linkage. The mammalian-E. coli hybrid was used to investigate the functional consequence of replacing His336 and Glu338, two residues postulated to participate in catalysis as part of a catalytic triad. The mutant mammalian GLN domains formed stable complexes with the E. coli
CPS
subunit, but the catalytic activity was severely impaired. While the His336Asn mutant does not form measurable amounts of the gamma-glutamyl thioester, the steady state concentration of the intermediate with the Glu338Gly mutant was comparable to the wild type hybrid because both the rate of formation and breakdown of the thioester are reduced. This result is consistent with the postulated role of Glu338 in maintaining His336 in the optimal orientation for catalysis and suggests a mechanism for the GLN
CPS
functional linkage.
...
PMID:The function of Glu338 in the catalytic triad of the carbamoyl phosphate synthetase amidotransferase domain. 985 83
In contrast to several other glutamine amidotransferases including asparagine synthetase, cytidine 5'-triphosphate (CTP) synthetase,
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
, and phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate (PRPP) amidotransferase, guanosine monophosphate synthetase (GMPS) will not utilize hydroxylamine as an alternative nitrogen source. Instead, the enzyme is inhibited by an unknown mechanism. One untested hypothesis was that hydroxylamine serves as a substrate and intercepts a xanthosine 5'-monophosphate- (XMP-) adenylate intermediate in the enzyme active site. The nucleotide product of this substitution reaction would be N2-hydroxyguanosine 5'-monophosphate (N2-OH-GMP, 2). Here we describe the chemoenzymatic preparation of 2, via the nucleotide 2-fluoroinosine 5'-monophosphate (F-IMP, 5), and characterization of both these compounds as inhibitors of Escherichia coli GMPS. F-IMP was conceived as an electronic mimic of a reactive intermediate in the GMPS reaction but was found to bind weakly to the enzyme (IC50 > 2 mM). In contrast, N2-OH-GMP shows time-dependent inhibition and is competitive with respect to XMP (Ki = 92 nM), representing the first example of a compound that displays these kinetic properties with GMPS. The mechanism of inhibition is proposed to occur via formation of a ternary E.
ATP
.2 complex, followed by a rate-determining isomerization to a higher affinity complex that has a t1/2 =7.5 min. The contrast in inhibitory activity for 2-substituted purines with GMPS formulates a basis for future inhibitor design. In addition, these results complement recent structural studies of GMPS and implicate the formation of the XMP-adenylate intermediate inducing a probable conformational change that stimulates the hydrolysis of glutamine.
...
PMID:N2-hydroxyguanosine 5'-monophosphate is a time-dependent inhibitor of Escherichia coli guanosine monophosphate synthetase. 989 Sep 11
A linked-function analysis of the allosteric responsiveness of
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
(
CPS
) from E. coli was performed by following the
ATP
synthesis reaction at low carbamoyl phosphate concentration. All three allosteric ligands, ornithine, UMP, and IMP, act by modifying the affinity of
CPS
for the substrate MgADP. Individually ornithine strongly promotes, and UMP strongly antagonizes, the binding of MgADP. IMP causes only a slight inhibition at 25 degreesC. When both ornithine and UMP were varied, models which presume a mutually exclusive binding relationship between these ligands do not fit the data as well as does one which allows both ligands (and substrate) to bind simultaneously. The same result was obtained with ornithine and IMP. By contrast, the actions of UMP and IMP together must be explained with a competitive model, consistent with previous reports that UMP and IMP bind to the same site. When ornithine is bound to the enzyme, its activation dominates the effects when either UMP or IMP is also bound. The relationship of this observation to the structure of
CPS
is discussed.
...
PMID:Allosteric dominance in carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. 993 Oct 4
In animals, UTP feedback inhibition of carbamyl phosphate synthetase II (CPSase) controls pyrimidine biosynthesis. Suppressor of black (Su(b) or rSu(b)) mutants of Drosophila melanogaster have elevated pyrimidine pools, and this mutation has been mapped to the rudimentary locus. We report that rSu(b) is a missense mutation resulting in a glutamate to lysine substitution within the second
ATP
binding site (i.e.
CPS
.B2 domain) of CPSase. This residue corresponds to Glu780 in the Escherichia coli enzyme (Glu1153 in hamster CAD) and is universally conserved among CPSases. When a transgene expressing the Glu-->Lys substitution was introduced into Drosophila lines homozygous for the black mutation, the resulting flies exhibited the Su(b) phenotype. Partially purified CPSase from rSu(b) and transgenic flies carrying this substitution exhibited a dramatic reduction in UTP feedback inhibition. The slight UTP inhibition observed with the Su(b) enzyme in vitro was due mainly to chelation of Mg2+ by UTP. However, the Km values for glutamate, bicarbonate, and
ATP
obtained from the Su(b) enzyme were not significantly different from wild-type values. From these experiments, we conclude that this residue plays an essential role in the UTP allosteric response, probably in propagating the response between the effector binding site and the
ATP
binding site. This is the first CPSase mutation found to abolish feedback inhibition without significantly affecting other enzyme catalytic parameters.
...
PMID:A mutation that uncouples allosteric regulation of carbamyl phosphate synthetase in Drosophila. 1008 Aug 91
The enzymes
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
(
CPS
) and carbamate kinase (CK) make carbamoyl phosphate in the same way: by
ATP
-phosphorylation of carbamate. The carbamate used by CK is made chemically, whereas
CPS
itself synthesizes its own carbamate in a process involving the phosphorylation of bicarbonate. Bicarbonate and carbamate are analogs and the phosphorylations are carried out by homologous 40 kDa regions of the 120 kDa
CPS
polypeptide. CK can also phosphorylate bicarbonate and is a homodimer of a 33 kDa subunit that was believed to resemble the 40 kDa regions of
CPS
. Such belief is disproven now by the CK structure reported here. The structure does not conform to the biotin carboxylase fold found in the 40 kDa regions of
CPS
, and presents a new type of fold possibly shared by homologous acylphosphate-making enzymes. A molecular 16-stranded open beta-sheet surrounded by alpha-helices is the hallmark of the CK dimer. Each subunit also contains two smaller sheets and a large crevice found at the location expected for the active center. Intersubunit interactions are very large and involve a central hydrophobic patch and more hydrophilic peripheral contacts. The crevice holds a sulfate that may occupy the site of an
ATP
phosphate, and is lined by conserved residues. Site-directed mutations tested at two of these residues inactivate the enzyme. These findings support active site location in the crevice. The orientation of the crevices in the dimer precludes their physical cooperation in the catalytic process. Such cooperation is not needed in the CK reaction but is a requirement of the mechanism of CPSs.
...
PMID:Carbamate kinase: New structural machinery for making carbamoyl phosphate, the common precursor of pyrimidines and arginine. 1021 41
The amidotransferase family of enzymes utilizes the ammonia derived from the hydrolysis of glutamine for a subsequent chemical reaction catalyzed by the same enzyme. The ammonia intermediate does not dissociate into solution during the chemical transformations. A well-characterized example of the structure and mechanism displayed by this class of enzymes is provided by
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
(
CPS
). Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase is isolated from Escherichia coli as a heterodimeric protein. The smaller of the two subunits catalyzes the hydrolysis of glutamine to glutamate and ammonia. The larger subunit catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate using 2 mol of
ATP
, bicarbonate, and ammonia. Kinetic investigations have led to a proposed chemical mechanism for this enzyme that requires carboxy phosphate, ammonia, and carbamate as kinetically competent reaction intermediates. The three-dimensional X-ray crystal structure of
CPS
has localized the positions of three active sites. The nucleotide binding site within the N-terminal half of the large subunit is required for the phosphorylation of bicarbonate and subsequent formation of carbamate. The nucleotide binding site within the C-terminal domain of the large subunit catalyzes the phosphorylation of carbamate to the final product, carbamoyl phosphate. The three active sites within the heterodimeric protein are separated from one another by about 45 A. The ammonia produced within the active site of the small subunit is the substrate for reaction with the carboxy phosphate intermediate that is formed in the active site found within the N-terminal half of the large subunit of
CPS
. Since the ammonia does not dissociate from the protein prior to its reaction with carboxy phosphate, this intermediate must therefore diffuse through a molecular tunnel that connects these two sites with one another. Similarly, the carbamate intermediate, initially formed at the active site within the N-terminal half of the large subunit, is the substrate for phosphorylation by the
ATP
bound to the active site located in the C-terminal half of the large subunit. A molecular passageway has been identified by crystallographic methods that apparently facilitates diffusion between these two active sites within the large subunit of
CPS
. Synchronization of the chemical transformations is controlled by structural perturbations among the three active sites. Molecular tunnels between distant active sites have also been identified in tryptophan synthase and glutamine phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate amidotransferase and are likely architectural features in an expanding list of enzymes.
...
PMID:The amidotransferase family of enzymes: molecular machines for the production and delivery of ammonia. 1038 30
Mammalian
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
is part of
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
-aspartate carbamoyltransferase-dihydroorotase (CAD), a multifunctional protein that also catalyzes the second and third steps of pyrimidine biosynthesis. Carbamoyl phosphate synthesis requires the concerted action of the glutaminase (GLN) and
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
domains of CAD. There is a functional linkage between these domains such that glutamine hydrolysis on the GLN domain does not occur at a significant rate unless
ATP
and HCO(3)(-), the other substrates needed for carbamoyl phosphate synthesis, bind to the synthetase domain. The GLN domain consists of catalytic and attenuation subdomains. In the separately cloned GLN domain, the catalytic subdomain is down-regulated by interactions with the attenuation domain, a process thought to be part of the functional linkage. Replacement of Ser(44) in the GLN attenuation domain with alanine increases the k(cat)/K(m) for glutamine hydrolysis 680-fold. The formation of a functional hybrid between the mammalian Ser(44) GLN domain and the Escherichia coli
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
large subunit had little effect on glutamine hydrolysis. In contrast,
ATP
and HCO(3)(-) did not stimulate the glutaminase activity, indicating that the interdomain linkage had been disrupted. In accord with this interpretation, the rate of glutamine hydrolysis and carbamoyl phosphate synthesis were no longer coordinated. Approximately 3 times more glutamine was hydrolyzed by the Ser(44) --> Ala mutant than that needed for carbamoyl phosphate synthesis. Ser(44), the only attenuation subdomain residue that extends into the GLN active site, appears to be an integral component of the regulatory circuit that phases glutamine hydrolysis and carbamoyl phosphate synthesis.
...
PMID:Functional linkage between the glutaminase and synthetase domains of carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase. Role of serine 44 in carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase-aspartate carbamoyltransferase-dihydroorotase (cad). 1049 79
The heterodimeric
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
(
CPS
) from Escherichia coli catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate from bicarbonate, glutamine, and two molecules of
ATP
. The enzyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of glutamine within the small amidotransferase subunit and then transfers ammonia to the two active sites within the large subunit. These three active sites are connected via an intermolecular tunnel, which has been located within the X-ray crystal structure of
CPS
from E. coli. It has been proposed that the ammonia intermediate diffuses through this molecular tunnel from the binding site for glutamine within the small subunit to the phosphorylation site for bicarbonate within the large subunit. To provide experimental support for the functional significance of this molecular tunnel, residues that define the interior walls of the "ammonia tunnel" within the small subunit were targeted for site-directed mutagenesis. These structural modifications were intended to either block or impede the passage of ammonia toward the large subunit. Two mutant proteins (G359Y and G359F) display kinetic properties consistent with a constriction or blockage of the ammonia tunnel. With both mutants, the glutaminase and bicarbonate-dependent ATPase reactions have become uncoupled from one another. However, these mutant enzymes are fully functional when external ammonia is utilized as the nitrogen source but are unable to use glutamine for the synthesis of carbamoyl-P. These results suggest the existence of an alternate route to the bicarbonate phosphorylation site when ammonia is provided as an external nitrogen source.
...
PMID:An engineered blockage within the ammonia tunnel of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase prevents the use of glutamine as a substrate but not ammonia. 1072 15
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from E. coli catalyzes the synthesis of carbamoyl phosphate through a series of four reactions occurring at three active sites connected by a molecular tunnel of 100 A. To understand the mechanism for coordination and synchronization among the active sites, the pre-steady-state time courses for the formation of phosphate, ADP, glutamate, and carbamoyl phosphate were determined. When bicarbonate and
ATP
were rapidly mixed with
CPS
, a stoichiometric burst of acid-labile phosphate and ADP was observed with a formation rate constant of 1100 min(-)(1). The burst phase was followed by a linear steady-state phase with a rate constant of 12 min(-)(1). When glutamine or ammonia was added to the initial reaction mixture, the magnitude and the rate of formation of the burst phase for either phosphate or ADP were unchanged, but the rate constant for the linear steady-state phase increased to an average value of 78 min(-)(1). These results demonstrate that the initial phosphorylation of bicarbonate is independent of the binding or hydrolysis of glutamine. The pre-steady-state time course for the hydrolysis of glutamine in the absence of
ATP
exhibited a burst of glutamate formation with a rate constant of 4 min(-)(1) when the reaction was quenched with base. In the presence of
ATP
and bicarbonate, the rate constant for the formation of the burst of glutamate was 1100 min(-)(1). The hydrolysis of
ATP
thus enhanced the hydrolysis of glutamine by a factor of 275, but there was no effect by glutamine on the initial phosphorylation of bicarbonate. The pre-steady-state time course for the formation of carbamoyl phosphate was linear with an overall rate constant of 72 min(-)(1). The absence of an initial burst of carbamoyl phosphate formation eliminates product release as a rate-determining step for
CPS
. Overall, these results have been interpreted to be consistent with a mechanism whereby the phosphorylation of bicarbonate serves as the initial trigger for the rest of the reaction cascade. The formation of the carboxy phosphate intermediate within the large subunit must induce a conformational change to the active site of the small subunit that enhances the hydrolysis of glutamine. Thus, ammonia is not released into the molecular tunnel until the activated bicarbonate is ready to form carbamate. The rate-limiting step for the steady-state assembly of carbamoyl phosphate is either the formation, migration, or phosphorylation of the carbamate intermediate.
...
PMID:Synchronization of the three reaction centers within carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. 1081 70
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